Traducción de matricide en Español:

matricide

matricidio, n.

Pronunciación /ˈmeɪtrəsaɪd//ˈmeɪtrɪsʌɪd//ˈmatrɪsʌɪd//ˈmætrəˌsaɪd/

nombre

Her mother, Clytemnestra, has been driven mad by dreams of her own death at the hands of her son, Orestes, who accomplishes that matricide as revenge for his mother's murder of his father, Agamemnon.

The Chorus replies that it is their duty to avenge crimes of matricide.

Although the historical characters that make up the cast are a pretty unsavory crew, all thoughts of murder, mayhem, and matricide were still in the future when Agrippina plotted to make her son, Nero, Rome's emperor.

He's set horrific tales of drug overdoses, chainsaw murders and matricide to a jubilant beat.

I stayed there for a few minutes and considered if I'd be able to plead temporary insanity when I committed matricide.

After a series of twists and turns, Orestes makes himself known to Electra and they avenge their father's murder by committing an act of matricide.

The Chorus of Furies insists that no one can save him from their clutches, because the crime of matricide is an unforgivable sin no matter what, adding that they want to drain away all of his blood and take his life.

I was really clobbered with a sense of the shock of the matricide victim.

He is at pains to point out that, rather than committing the usual matricide / patricide so common in the intellectual sphere, his paper augments my interpretation, superimposing one interpretation over the other.

After this act of matricide, James' descent into evil feels almost Shakespearean.

In my heart I was already no longer the big angry man, but a stupid and selfish little boy who was on the point of committing matricide.

The second immeasurable crime is matricide, killing one's mother.

‘Unless there's an increase in patricide and matricide twentysomethings who are on a bender with huge debts could be in for a very rude awakening,’ he joked.

2

(person)

matricida masculino

We get little real sense of the inner torment suffered by the matricide Orestes and his sister-accomplice Electra, who, like Hamlet, have been handed the task of committing murder to avenge their father and restore order.

The would-be matricide, by the way, will not be charged and social services are dealing with the matter.